For some reason, even though I've been subscribed to this topic, I didn't get any notifications about all the responses that have been made.
iridescent_slime said:
But they really aren't? A frown can be a look of discomfort or frustration or sadness or worry. It's an exceptionally broad term. A scowl is more specific; it refers to a hostile expression, one that directs displeasure towards someone or something.
Okay, that actually makes sense as a distinction, but needs to be reflected properly in the wiki article.
A wiki rewrite may be in order, but I'm not sure it would help much. Facial expressions are notoriously hard to describe in few words. You either know what they look like or you don't.
That's what illustrative examples are there for, though.
Unsurprising, considering how bad a lot of users seem to be at recognizing and tagging emotions and expressions. I'm actually quite amazed by the number of posts that are tagged frown, because I see faces that would fall under the frown umbrella all the time that either get tagged expressionless or are simply left untagged.
There's no harm in leaving this tag alone. Everyone who can read faces well enough to tell the difference between a frown and a scowl will continue to use both tags differently, and anyone who can't read faces isn't being affected by the existence of scowl anyway.
I don't agree with leaving this alone. Allowing bad examples to proliferate will confuse users who seek out illustrative examples to figure out what qualifies for a given tag, since the user's interpretation of the term may not always fit what the "consensus" definition of it on the site is.
blindVigil said:
Synonym does not mean interchangeable.
Actually, yes, it does. That's how it's properly defined. It's just that the average person conflates "synonym" with what linguists call "meronyms", "hyponyms"/"coordinate terms", "metonym" and others.
A scowl is a more intense expression than a frown, it's the difference between someone looking just upset, and someone looking absolutely livid.
post #3809728 is a frown
post #3801933 is a scowl
The second one doesn't look "absolutely livid". She looks like she's feeling a mix of anger and worry/discomfort, like she's seeing something she hates (which, given the commentary, is probably something like a love interest getting uncomfortably cozy with someone else) but feels powerless to do anything about it at the moment, hence the nail-biting.
@Hillside_Moose said:
-1. post #3826284 and post #3720518 aren't frowns, yet they're recognizably scowling.
... I don't know what you're on about. Both of them are frowning, unless to you a "frown" means something that doesn't include furrowing the eyebrows like they're doing (it's not as super-blatant as many examples are, but they are doing it).